New Deal

Lord McKenzie of Luton: My right honourable friend the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions (Mr James Purnell) has made the following Statement.
	I am pleased to announce today my plans for implementing the flexible New Deal. The new employment programme will build on the success of the various existing New Deals for jobseekers it replaces, helping to underpin our objectives for full employment and eradicating child poverty.
	I want to make these opportunities available to jobseekers everywhere as soon as possible. Based on our previous experience in successfully implementing pathways to work in just two phases, we will adopt a similar approach for the flexible New Deal, with phase 1 being delivered from October 2009 and phase 2 from October 2010.
	The flexible New Deal is a key part of implementing the vision set out in David Freud's report, Reducing Dependency, Increasing Opportunity published last year. It will be the first programme commissioned under the new DWP commissioning strategy that I announced on 28 February, and through which we will engage specialist back-to-work providers in the public, private and third sectors to offer more creative and innovative ways of helping jobseekers to overcome their specific problems with the clear aim of getting into sustainable employment.
	Providers will be paid by results, focused on helping long-term unemployed people into jobs that last, and focusing on every individual and not just the well motivated.
	Providers will match the type and length of activity to each participant's needs resulting in an individually tailored support package. Our vision is that everyone who can work should do so. I have made it clear that all jobseekers joining this programme will be required to do at least four weeks of work or work-related activity if they fail to find work within 12 months of support from their provider, and we will be looking for bidders who can offer even more for those who will benefit.
	Advertisements for organisations interested in bidding for phase 1 contracts will be published in the press from next week.
	The Jobcentre Plus districts to be included in each phase are:
	
		
			 Phase 1 Phase 2 
			 Birmingham and Solihull Merseyside 
			 North and East Yorkshire and Humber Forth Valley, Fife and Tayside 
			 Tees Valley Glasgow 
			 South Yorkshire West London 
			 Derbyshire City and East London 
			 Surrey and Sussex North and North East London 
			 Kent Essex 
			 Leicestershire and Northamptonshire Bedfordshire and Hertfordshire 
			 Nottinghamshire Berkshire, Buckinghamshire and Oxfordshire 
			 Central London Cumbria and Lancashire 
			 Lambeth, Southwark and Wandsworth South London 
			 Devon and Cornwall Dorset and Somerset 
			 South Wales Valleys West of England 
			 South East Wales Gloucestershire, Wiltshire and Swindon 
			 South West Wales Hampshire and the Isle of Wight 
			 North and Mid-Wales Highland, Islands, Clyde Coast and Grampian 
			 Cheshire, Halton and Warrington West Yorkshire 
			 Black Country Northumbria 
			 Greater Manchester Central South Tyne and Wear Valley 
			 Greater Manchester East and West  
			 Coventry and Warwickshire  
			 The Marches  
			 Staffordshire  
			 Lanarkshire and East Dunbartonshire  
			 Edinburgh, Lothian and Borders  
			 Ayrshire, Dumfries, Galloway and Inverclyde  
			 Cambridgeshire and Suffolk  
			 Norfolk  
			 Lincolnshire and Rutland  
		
	
	Transforming Britain's labour market: Ten Years of the New Deal is available at: www.dwp.gov.uk/welfarereform/docs/PMNewDeal2-01-08.pdf
	DWP Commissioning Strategy is available at: www.dwp.gov.uk/publications/dwp/2008/com-strategy/cs-rep-08.pdf

EU: NATO Foreign Ministers' Informal Meeting

Lord Malloch-Brown: My honourable friend the Minister for Europe (Jim Murphy) has made the following Written Ministerial Statement.
	My right honourable friend the Foreign Secretary (David Miliband) and Stewart Eldon, UK Permanent Representative to NATO, represented the UK at the informal meeting of NATO Foreign Ministers in Brussels on 6 March 2008.
	The agenda items covered were as follows:
	Afghanistan
	Allies decided that a public statement which clearly defines NATO's achievements and objectives in Afghanistan would be needed at the Bucharest summit on 2 to 4 April. Ministers agreed that this should include input from troop-contributing nations (that is, including partners such as Australia and Sweden) and other international organisations involved in Afghanistan.
	NATO Enlargement
	Ministers discussed the membership aspirations of Croatia, Albania and Macedonia. Decisions on each country's respective applications would be made at Bucharest, based on their progress towards meeting accepted standards. NATO's relationships with Ukraine, Georgia, Bosnia, Montenegro and Serbia were also raised and discussion will continue at the Bucharest summit.
	Kosovo
	Ministers discussed the role of NATO's Kosovo Force (KFOR) following Kosovo's declaration of independence and the evolving relationship between KFOR, the UN's Mission in Kosovo (UNMIK) and the EU's Rule of Law Mission in Kosovo (EULEX).
	NATO-EU Relations
	Ministers acknowledged the need to strengthen and deepen NATO-EU co-operation. This would be an important factor in the success of KFOR's mission.

Sale of Student Loans Bill

Lord Triesman: My honourable friend the Minister of State for Lifelong Learning and Higher Education (Bill Rammell) has made the following Written Ministerial Statement.
	The Sale of Student Loans Bill is currently before Parliament. It creates the legislative framework for the programme of sale of income-contingent student loans announced at Budget 2007. The Bill has completed its passage through the House of Commons and had its Second Reading in the House of Lords on 19 February 2008. The Government's intention, as announced at Budget 2007, is for the sales programme to commence in 2008-09. The Government want the flexibility to make sales at times which offer the best value for money, including the period immediately after Royal Assent to the Sale of Student Loans Bill.
	To that end, the Government seek to incur expenditure on external expert services on work that comprises the preparatory phase of implementation, in advance of an initial transaction. Whereas the Department for Innovation, Universities and Skills has already incurred preliminary expenditure on legal and financial expertise to refine the policy intention to conduct a sale programme, from existing funds, it seeks advances from the contingencies fund to be able to incur expenditure on preparatory implementation work.
	Parliamentary approval for additional resources for this new service will be sought in a supplementary estimate for 2008-09 for the Department for Innovation, Universities and Skills. Pending that approval, urgent expenditure estimated at £5 million will be met by repayable cash advances from the contingencies fund.